Marriage On Its Way Towards Losing that Happiness Edge

coupleProponents of marriage like to toss around the statistic that married people (and married men in particular) are happier and healthier than the wretched ranks of the unwed. But new research has found that the happiness/health gap is narrowing, not because the married crew is losing its happy glow (though that may indeed be occurring), but because the single component is getting happier.

The study, led by Hui Liu, assistant professor of sociology at Michigan State University, used data from the National Health Interview Survey from 1972 to 2003. The researchers found that while the self-reported health of the married is “still better than that of the never-married,” the “gap has closed considerably.” Single women shouldn’t rejoice just yet: The uptick was due overwhelmingly to improvements in the health of never-married men. Liu thinks that this result may be “partly because never-married men have greater access to social resources and support that historically were found in a spouse.” (Female robots, perhaps? Or Internet porn?) Still, single women also saw an increase, and the singles health boost also spread across racial lines to both blacks and whites.

For those with one or more marriages in their past, the results aren’t as clear—the health of the the divorced, widowed, and separated worsened from 1972 to 2003 relative to their married peers (though whether entering into a second or third marriage increased your health wasn’t mentioned). So maybe the statistic should be revised to something like “first marriages and single-malehood, and possibly second and third marriages will make you happier and healthier.” Happy dating!

Image: iStockPhoto

August 12th, 2008 Tags: ,
by Melissa Lafsky in Diseases, Injuries, & Other Ailments, The World According to Darwin | 1 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

One Response to “Marriage On Its Way Towards Losing that Happiness Edge”

  1. Young Says:

    So true. As a male, I see more males (especially single males) taking good care of themselves; working out, cutting down on drinking, buying clothes that actually fit and look presentable, reading a book, etc.). I think married men (in general) might actually be on the decline in heath because there is less importance on health compared to finances, maintaining a good household, and other major sharing needs in a relationship of two people. The only one true benefitting is the CAT.

    Not saying that being married is worse than being single (unless you married a bad person); just that marriage doesn’t guarantee good health and happiness without work.

Leave a Reply